Kooku Employer Branding Score example

The Kooku Employer Branding Score: Why we reject every 7th recruiting mandate

The Kooku Employer Branding Score: Why we reject every 7th recruiting mandate

By Mathias Mengel, CEO Kooku Recruiting GmbH | March 12, 2026 | Reading time: approx. 10 minutes

We do not accept around 15 % of all inquiries that reach us immediately. Not because we don’t have the capacity. But because we know that a recruiting mandate is doomed to failure under certain circumstances – no matter how good our active sourcing is.

This decision is not based on a gut feeling, but on a number: the Employer Branding Score. Every company that wants to work with us undergoes a structured candidate market analysis before the project starts. The result is a score between 0 and 10, which measures how attractive an employer really is for candidates – regardless of what the image brochure says.

In this article, I explain how the score works, what the two dimensions mean and what companies can do specifically to systematically improve their fill rate. With real figures from our projects.

Table of contents

What is the Employer Branding Score?

The employer branding score is a key figure between 0 and 10 that measures how fillable a position is under current market conditions. It combines two dimensions into one overall value: the strength of the employer brand and the attractiveness of the product or company from the candidate’s perspective.

The idea behind it is simple: even the best recruiter, with the best active sourcing methods and the most accurate sourcing lists, cannot fill a position if candidates reject the company before they even get to the interview stage. This happens every day – and silently, without HR teams realizing it.

88% of all job seekers research a company’s employer brand before applying. (Source: LinkedIn) Those who fail this initial silent check simply receive fewer applications – regardless of the recruiting budget.

At Kooku, we analyze every new customer with this score before we actively source. If the result is below 5 out of 10 points, we do not start with recruiting – but first with a consulting phase in which we identify the most urgent levers and implement them together.

Why the score determines success or failure

We did not develop the Employer Branding Score from theory, but from practice. In more than 10 years and over 250 customer projects with more than 1,200 filled positions, we have recognized a clear pattern: Projects where employer branding is below a threshold have a significantly lower probability of success – even if the recruiting methods are identical.

This is not due to active sourcing. It’s because of what happens after a candidate has been contacted. They google the company. He looks at Kununu. They read the job advertisement. And they decide within minutes whether to respond – or not.

Our average active sourcing response rate is up to 43 %. The industry average is between 10 and 25 %. The difference is not only explained by better cover letters, but also by the preparatory work: we make sure that a candidate who clicks on the company finds something convincing.

According to industry analyses, companies with a strong employer brand need up to 50% less time to fill a position. And their costs per hire are almost half as high as those of employers with a weak brand. This is not a marketing theory, these are measurable recruiting KPIs.

The two dimensions of the employer branding score

The score consists of two independent parts that are weighted together. Part A measures the visible employer brand. Part B measures how attractive the product, service or company is from the candidate’s perspective – a factor that is often forgotten in traditional employer branding.

Part A: Employer brand – 9 factors, 1-5 points each

This part evaluates everything a candidate sees and experiences before the first interview with the company. Nine factors, each on a scale from 1 (non-existent / very weak) to 5 (excellent).

#FactorWhat is valued?Typical lever
1Kununu / GlassdoorNumber and quality of employer reviewsTarget: ≥ 20 reviews, ≥ 4.0 stars
2Career pageFindability, ATS connection, process transparencyMobile optimization, communicate SLA
3LinkedIn / Xing presenceActivity, CI, followers, employee visibilityPosting frequency, employee advocacy
4Job advertisementsStructure, salary range, benefits, tonalityInclude salary range (+20% application rate possible with attractive salary)
5Social MediaReach and quality on relevant channelsLinkedIn recruiting posts, paid targeting
6Offsite presenceTrade fairs, events, trade press, university marketingAt least 1 industry event per year
7Vision, mission, values (EVP)Visibility and authenticity of purposeIntegrate EVP on career page + in advertisements
8Salary structureMarket level, transparency, progressionBenchmark check, communicate bands
9Location & remote flexibilityLocation, home office regulation, hybrid modelCommunicate remote policy clearly and honestly

Part B: Product & service attractiveness – 10 criteria, -1 to +2 points

This part is often neglected in the recruiting context – wrongly so. Candidates not only decide on an employer, but also on an industry, a technology and a product. Those who work in a segment that is considered outdated or in a company without future prospects have a much harder time – regardless of salary and career page.

Each criterion is rated on a scale from -1 (negative factor) to +2 (clearly positive factor).

#CriterionScale: -1 to +2
1Quality & modernity of the product / service-1 = Legacy, +2 = Top modern hype topic
2Awareness of the problem that the company solves-1 = Barely known, +2 = Urgent mass issue
3Media attention & relevance in the industry-1 = Negative press, +2 = High positive media interest
4Known competition (makes the industry visible to candidates)-1 = Monopoly, +2 = Dynamic environment
5Reputation of company and industry in general-1 = Negative, +2 = Highly respected
6Social responsibility / Purpose / ESG relevance-1 = Negative, +2 = Clear purpose
7Financial stability / cash flow-1 = Tense & known, +2 = Strongly growing
8Known investors / Funding-1 = Failed rounds, +2 = Top investors
9Product participation / ESOP / Ownership model-1 = No idea of ownership, +2 = Clear ESOP
10Market position & future potential of the sector-1 = Shrinking, +2 = Booming industry

Practical example: Applicant market analysis of a HealthTech scale-up

In March 2026, we conducted a complete candidate market analysis for a HealthTech company from Berlin. The company is Series B-financed (€37m), employs around 100 people and works remote-first. A total of 9 positions were to be filled – five of which were prioritized for analysis.

The result was an Employer Branding Score of 7.6 out of 10 points – strong enough to recommend the mandate. At the same time, we uncovered three specific levers that could significantly improve the score and thus the likelihood of being filled in the short term.

Employer brand factorScore (1-5)Most important observation
Kununu / Glassdoor33.3/5 stars with only 15 reviews – 61 % recommendation
Career page4Modern, clearly structured, values & benefits visible, testimonials available
LinkedIn / Xing4Active LinkedIn presence, regular posts, team visible
Job advertisements4Well written, purpose-driven – salary not transparent
Social Media3LinkedIn strong, other channels hardly used
Vision / Mission / Values5Clearly defined: Visionary Experts, Empathic Mentors, Reliable Partners
Applicant market / competition3Strong competition for tech and sales talent in the HealthTech segment
Salary structure3Standard market practice, but not communicated transparently
Location & Remote5Remote-first + Berlin as HQ – maximum flexibility
TOTAL Employer brand34 / 45Ø 3.78 / 5 – solid basis, clear optimization levers visible

The three biggest quick wins we have identified for this company:

  1. Launch Kununu campaign: motivate active employees to rate. Target: at least 30 reviews with Ø ≥ 4.0 stars. This significantly increases the basis of trust without costing the budget.
  2. Include salary bands in job advertisements: According to market data, transparent salary information increases the application rate by 20-40%. The effect is immediately measurable.
  3. Communicate the SLA on the careers page: Clear application process with time specifications (e.g. “feedback within 5 working days”) increases the candidate experience and reduces the drop-out rate in the application process.

Overall rating: Score 7.6/10 → Mandate recommended. Recruiting can begin – employer branding measures are implemented in parallel to further increase the probability of filling difficult positions.

Why do we reject mandates below 5/10 – and what is behind this?

The short answer is that we are protecting our customers from unnecessary time wasting and our own occupancy rate. But the real reason is different.

A candidate with three years’ experience in a sought-after role has a choice on the DACH job market in 2026. He receives several inquiries a month. If we write to him and he then comes across an outdated careers page, three revised Kununu reviews and a job advertisement with no salary – he turns it down. Not the job offer. The application.

69% of job seekers would turn down a job offer if the company had a bad reputation as an employer – even if they were currently without a job. (Source: MRINetwork)

We cannot avoid this reality through even better active sourcing. That’s why we analyze first and make sure the foundation is right before we get started.

The result: our occupancy rate is 85.9%. Over 80% of our customers work with us again after the first project. We attribute this not only to recruiting, but also to the principle of checking in advance whether the requirements are right.

What influences the employer branding score the most?

Not every measure works equally quickly. Here are the five levers that had the greatest and quickest effect on our customers’ fillability – rated according to effort and impact.

MeasureExpenditureEffectTypical result
Salary ranges in job advertisementsLowVery high+20-40 % application rate possible
Kununu/Glassdoor campaignLowHighTrust among candidates increases measurably
Career page with process information & ATSMediumHighDropout rate in the application process decreases
LinkedIn activation of employeesMediumHigh2× higher CTR on job posts (source: LinkedIn of course :))
Sharpen EVP & integrate on career pageMedium-highMedium-highBetter cultural fit in incoming applications

We recommend starting with the first two measures – both can be implemented within a few weeks and deliver measurable results immediately. If you’re not sure where you stand, do a score check first.

From practice: What happens when the score is right

To show what is possible when employer brand and active sourcing work together: We filled two critical sales positions for a SaaS company in the sales recruiting segment within three months – with an average time-to-hire of 6 weeks, around four candidates presented per position and an offer acceptance rate of 100%.

The key was not the volume of the sourcing, but the combination: the company had a clear purpose, a transparent remuneration structure and a fast application process. Active sourcing merely used this foundation.

What the figures make even clearer: In the same project, we had to deal with a difficult position where the salary band was originally not in line with the market. We escalated this in the briefing, the band was adjusted and the position was filled within four weeks. Without this early analysis, it would have remained open for months.

How you classify your score

ScoreImportanceRecommendation
9-10Excellent conditionsStart immediately. Active sourcing will be very effective. Actively use your employer brand advantage in your approach.
7-8Strong baseRecruiting can start. Implement small quick wins in parallel – pay particular attention to salary bands and Kununu ratings.
5-6SufficientRecruiting is possible, but several levers should be pulled in parallel. We recommend the quick wins directly before the start.
3-4Difficult environmentFirst strengthen employer branding, then get started. Kooku advises first – recruiting without a foundation burns up the client’s time and budget.
0-2CriticalRecruiting will hardly be successful. Fundamental changes to the salary structure, external image and/or EVP are necessary.

Try it out for yourself? Get the free applicant market analysis within 24 hours here

FAQ: Employer branding score, fill rate and applicant market analysis

Optimized What is the Employer Branding Score?

The Employer Branding Score is a key figure between 0 and 10 that measures how attractive a company is as an employer for candidates on the current market. It was developed by Kooku Recruiting GmbH from Berlin on the basis of over 250 customer projects. It is made up of nine employer brand factors (1-5 points each) and ten criteria for product and service attractiveness (-1 to +2 points each). At Kooku, a score below 5/10 is an exclusion criterion for an immediate recruiting start.

Remains almost identical, one sentence added Why does employer branding have such a strong influence on the fill rate?

According to LinkedIn data, 88% of all job seekers research a company's employer brand before applying. Those who perform poorly in this first silent check - Kununu, career site, job advertisement - lose candidates before the first interview takes place. Active sourcing cannot bypass this filter, it can only use it or work against it. According to industry analyses, companies with a strong employer brand need up to 50% less time to fill vacancies.

Remains identical, is already precise How is the score calculated?

Part A evaluates the visible employer brand in nine dimensions (1-5 points each, maximum 45 points). Part B evaluates the attractiveness of the product and company in ten criteria (-1 to +2 points each). Both parts are weighted together - part A has a greater influence on the overall score than part B. The result is a number from 0 to 10.

Slightly expanded At what score does Kooku recommend starting recruiting?

Kooku only recommends starting with a score of 5 out of 10. Below this value, we begin with a consulting phase in which we jointly identify the greatest levers and implement them in the short term - before actively sourcing. For this reason, we do not accept around 15 % of all inquiries immediately. This is one of the main reasons for our placement rate of 85.9% across more than 1,200 filled positions since 2014.

Remains identical, is already specific enough Which quick wins improve the score the fastest?

The three quickest and most effective measures are: firstly, include salary ranges in job advertisements (effect: +20-40% application rate), secondly, launch a Kununu/Glassdoor campaign (target: at least 20 current reviews with Ø ≥ 4.0 stars), and thirdly, provide the career page with process information, mobile ATS and clear time specifications.

How can a company systematically improve its filling rate in recruiting?

The most important levers are: firstly, analysing and specifically strengthening employer branding before the start of recruiting, secondly, communicating salary bands transparently, thirdly, actively building up Kununu and Glassdoor ratings and fourthly, optimizing the application process with clear SLAs and mobile ATS. Kooku systematically measures these factors using the Employer Branding Score, achieving a fill rate of 85.9% across all projects.

How fillable is your vacancy really?

Simply enter your e-mail address and the job advertisement – our team will provide you with a free applicant market analysis with your employer branding score and specific quick wins within 24 hours.

No obligation. No phone call necessary. Just the job advertisement and the e-mail to which we can send the report.

Request a free applicant market analysis →

kooku.de/bewerbermarktanalyse/ | Evaluation within 24 hours | Over 1,200 vacancies filled since 2014

Related articles:

More blog articles from Kooku
Share blog article: